Dave Porter At Bear Camp: or, The Wild Man of Mirror Lake. Stratemeyer Edward

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Dave Porter At Bear Camp: or, The Wild Man of Mirror Lake - Stratemeyer Edward

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style="font-size:15px;">      "Good for Dave! It's the only thing to do if that girl is to be saved."

      "Row on and keep your eyes wide open," directed Phil. "I don't think they'll get very far away."

      Dave had calculated the distance as closely as possible, and once under water he pushed ahead with all speed in the direction where he had seen the hand and arm. While at Oak Hall he had learned the trick of swimming under water with his eyes open, and this now stood him in good stead.

      "There she is," he thought, as he caught sight of something white passing just to the left of him. He made a quick turn, and a few seconds later had the girl by the hand. Then Dave caught her under the arms, and treading water, brought both her and himself to the surface.

      "There they are!" he heard Phil cry, and the next moment the rowboat came up close.

      "Oh, oh! sa – sa – save m – me!" spluttered the girl; and breaking loose, she swung around and caught Dave tightly by the neck.

      It was the strangle-hold of a drowning person, and our hero might have fared badly had not assistance been at hand. But as it was, Roger and Phil reached out, and while Shadow and Ben balanced the rowboat, this pair hauled the girl on board. Then they aided Dave in getting in.

      "Oh, oh! Is sh – she d – dead?" gasped the girl, as she looked at the woman who had collapsed on the stern seat.

      "No, she has only fainted," answered Roger. "She'll soon be over it."

      "How brave you are to come to our rescue!" went on the girl, turning to Dave. "I – I thought I was going to drown!" and she shuddered.

      "It was a pretty close call," answered Phil. "My friend here jumped overboard just in the nick of time."

      There was just then little time to say more, for others were in the water crying for assistance. In the meantime, there was another cry from the deck of the steam yacht.

      "Don't jump overboard! It isn't necessary. The fire is out!"

      "Hello! Did you hear that?" queried Dave. "Somebody said the fire is out."

      By this time the two other rowboats had picked up eight of those who had leaped overboard. The boys succeeded in getting on board two others, a short, fat man who was puffing like a porpoise, and a young man.

      "That settles it," snorted the fat man, as he sank down on one of the seats. "No more ocean pictures for me! All the dramas I act in after this will be on dry land."

      "And I sha'n't go to sea again for Mr. Appleby," answered the girl who had been rescued. She was rapidly recovering, and so was the woman on the stern seat.

      "Got everybody?" yelled a man from the deck of the steam yacht. And by his cap and uniform the boys knew he must be the captain of the vessel.

      "I think so," answered the first mate of the Eaglet.

      "It was foolish of them to jump overboard," grumbled the captain of the steam yacht. "I told all of them there was no danger."

      "No danger!" snorted the mate of the Eaglet. "How do you make that out, with all that fire?"

      "It wasn't fire – that is, not much of it," was the answer. "It was mostly smoke. We have a moving picture company on board, and they had a lot of fireworks, some of 'em tied up in old sail cloth. The fireworks started to go off – why I don't know – and they set fire to the cloth, and when we wet that down it made an awful smoke. But all the stuff was in a zinc-lined compartment, so there wasn't much real danger. The worst was when those rockets went off and shot up right out of the hatchway."

      "And are you sure the fire is entirely out?" asked the mate of Mr. Lawrence's vessel.

      "Just about. We'll have the men make a search, so that there won't be any further danger."

      After a little more conversation the three rowboats were brought close to the steam yacht, from the side of which a ladder had been lowered.

      "O dear! Are we to go back to that boat?" queried the girl Dave had saved from drowning.

      She was a miss of perhaps eighteen years, tall and slender, with brown hair and big brown eyes. She appealed to our hero as she spoke.

      "I don't see what else there is to do," he answered, "unless you want to be taken to our steamer."

      "What place is your steamer bound for?"

      "We hope to make Portland some time this afternoon."

      "Oh indeed! Then I think I would rather go aboard that steamer than back on the yacht," answered the young lady. "What do you think, Aunt Bess?" she went on, appealing to the woman in the rowboat, who by this time had recovered from her plunge into the sea.

      "I think I would like to get ashore as soon as possible, Della," returned the aunt. "I just hate the water, anyway, and I don't think I'll take another sea trip in a hurry."

      "Oh, say, Miss Ford, you might as well go back on the steam yacht. I guess the danger is all over," put in the fourth person who had been picked up – a young man about Dave's age. "Didn't you hear the captain say that the fire was out?"

      "Yes, I know," answered Della Ford. "But I'm so afraid, Mr. Porton," and the girl looked rather helplessly at those around her.

      "Where is that steam yacht bound for?" questioned Phil.

      "We were going somewhere outside of Cape Cod," answered the stout man who had been rescued. "But I guess Mr. Appleby will have to give the trip up for the present. He's the manager of our company, you know," he added, by way of explanation.

      "What sort of a company is that – a theatrical company?" asked Shadow.

      "Oh, no. This is a moving-picture company – one belonging to the Appleby Film Corporation."

      "Oh, then you are all moving-picture actors!" cried Ben, with interest.

      "Yes," answered the young man. "But we didn't come out to get into any such scene as this," he added, with a short laugh.

      By this time a number of those in the rowboats had been assisted to the deck of the steam yacht, and those above were calling down to those in the rowboat manned by Dave and his chums.

      "Say, young men, I'm very much obliged to you for what you did for me," cried the stout man, heartily, as he prepared to ascend the ladder. "I guess I was foolish to jump overboard when there was no great danger."

      "It's too bad Case didn't get a picture of that scene," said the young man named Porton. "It would have been a dandy to work into one of the sea dramas."

      "I guess that's right," returned Dave, with a grim smile.

      "Much obliged to all of you," went on Ward Porton. "If there are any charges, send the bill to Mr. Thomas Appleby, the manager. He ought to reward you handsomely for saving a part of his company." And with these words he followed the stout man to the deck of the steam yacht.

      "Aren't you folks coming up?" came a call from the manager of the moving-picture company, as he leaned over the rail.

      "Oh, Mr. Appleby, I don't want to stay out here!" cried Della Ford, "and neither does my Aunt Bess! The young men here say their boat is going to Portland. Maybe we had better go there and take the train

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